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retiredflorida

Butterfly Ginger

RetiredFlorida
11 years ago

Bought a butterfly ginger maybe a month or two ago. Such a wonderfully fragrant plant, I kept it in the original nursery pot until I could find an appropriate location for it. It is starting to look quite ragged now and I have not planted it yet.

Is it going dormant? Should I just cut off the tops and put the rhizome in the ground?

Darren

Comments (15)

  • katkin_gw
    11 years ago

    It doesn't go dormant for me, but it does dies off after it's bloomed. And it is slower to bloom in the winter, it loves the summer heat. To bloom well it needs about 4 to 6 hours of sun, morning sun is the best. :o)

  • starryrider
    11 years ago

    It does go dormant further north and die back to the ground. Plant the rhizome it will grow come spring.

  • thonotorose
    11 years ago

    I would add that you might be better to wait til the canes turn pretty brown. Maybe the rhizome keeps more vigor that way.

  • RetiredFlorida
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Thank you all. Good to know it loves the heat. It started wilting soon after arriving home, but I think it was kept in mostly shade at the nursery. I at first put it in almost full sun but thought that was doing it in, so I put it on the north wall of my home.

    Is it a water loving plant?

    Darren

  • katkin_gw
    11 years ago

    If it was in shade at the nursery, you might need to harden it off, that is giving it a little sun at a time each day until it can take the 4 hours of sunlight or the leaves might scorch. :o)

  • sun_worshiper
    11 years ago

    Mine is in nearly full shade in a very wet spot. It is thriving - I have to shovel prune it multiple times a year. But it does go pretty much fully dormant for me in the winter.

    I'd be happy to trade rhizomes if anyone wants more.

    Anybody have varieties that remain short? Mine has white flowers and topped out around 8' tall this year!

  • Carol love_the_yard (Zone 9A Jacksonville, FL)
    11 years ago

    Sunworshiper, I would love to trade shampoo ginger, variegated shell ginger or cannas (peach or dark pink) for a butterfly ginger, if you would be interested in any of those? No worries if you are not. Please email me through My Page.

    Thanks!
    Carol in Jacksonville

  • KaraLynn
    11 years ago

    Mine is growing in full sun right up against my pond. In fact it keeps trying to work it's way under the rock edging so that it can dip it's roots in the water! Here's an older picture of the butterfly ginger by the pond. The clump is at least twice as big now and I've had to add a brace in front of the plants to keep them from laying in the water.

    Kara

  • writersblock (9b/10a)
    11 years ago

    That's just lovely, Kara! What a beautiful pondscape.

  • sun_worshiper
    11 years ago

    I sent you an email Carol.

  • cavamarie
    11 years ago

    I had some butterfly ginger, and I had to get rid of it, it spread like a weed! You might want to keep it contained somehow. It is wonderful, tho.

  • RetiredFlorida
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Cavamarie,

    Being a relative newbie to gardening, please elaborate on your comment a little more. I understand how some plants drop seeds and spread profusely in that manner and I've got those nasty natural muscadine vines that take over my trees but am not sure how this plant would spread so quickly. Are your plants near a source of water?

    I have seen large groups of gingers, most being near or in swampy areas. Thanks for the warning.

    Darren

  • katkin_gw
    11 years ago

    Darren, gingers spread by making more rhizomes. You can dig them out if it gets to be too many. I didn't find this one spread too quickly but others do. The green shell ginger was one I had to remove.

  • RetiredFlorida
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Thanks Katkin, I was and still having a hard time understanding how a rhizome can spread so quickly.......

    Oh BTW, mine wasn't getting enough sun and is greening up nicely now it is getting more sun.

  • sun_worshiper
    11 years ago

    I wouldn't consider this invasive - but it does require management. My clump grew from a tiny start to 4' square in about a season. I am maintaining my clump at about 3' square, and doing so requires shovel pruning about 3 times a year. It is vigorous and can spread sideways a foot or two easily each season. But it isn't hard to pull out the parts I don't want, and it is such a pretty plant that this is an acceptable level of care for me. But if you treat it as a plant and forget - then yeah, you could get a jungle pretty quickly=)

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